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    Five-PartDaytrading Course

    Kevin Haggerty

    Los Angeles, California

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    Copyright 2000, TradingMarkets.com, Kevin Haggerty

    ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted,in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written

    permission of the publisher and the authors.

    This publication is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the subject matter covered. It

    is sold with the understanding that the authors and the publisher are not engaged in rendering legal, accounting, or other

    professional service.

    Authorization to photocopy items for internal or personal use, or for the internal or personal use of specific clients, is

    granted by TradingMarkets.com, provided that the U.S. $7.00 per page fee is paid directly to TradingMarkets.com,

    1-213-955-5777.

    Printed in the United States of America

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    Five-Part Daytrading Course iii Kevin Haggerty

    Table of Contents

    Part One: How to Become A Winning daytrader 1

    Part Two: How to Select the Best Stocks to Trade Every Day 11

    Part Three: Stacking the Odds in Your Favor 22

    Part Four: The Best Daily Setups to Trade 34

    Part Five: Trading in the Real World 51

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    Five-Part DaytradingCourse

    By Kevin Haggerty

    Throughout this course, I will share with you some of the important lessons I have learned about trading. Some ofthese lessons were taught to me by others, many I learned by myself, and a few of these were learned the hard way. My

    goal is to teach you the essential tools and strategies one needs in order to have a chance of succeeding at daytrading.

    Sincerely

    Kevin Haggerty

    How To Become A Winning Daytrader. During the first section Kevin will teach you what you need to know aboutbecoming a successful daytrader. Proper psychology, the correct trading technology, money management and positionsize are just a few of the topics that he will discuss.

    PART ONE: HOW TO BECOME A WINNING DAYTRADER

    In this first week of our five-week course on daytrading, we want to define what the business of daytrading is and what itis not. We will discuss the differences between professional direct-access daytraders, and those traders attempting toaccomplish the same thing through online brokerage firms with internet ISP hook ups.

    The SEC has expressed many concerns regarding the explosive growth of online daytrading, and we will address their

    concerns in this first installment of the course. We will explain why daytrading is potentially a valid and rewarding

    business, but at the same time, we will make you acutely aware of the various hurdles you must overcome to succeed.

    Successful daytraders must maintain a proper psychology, mental attitude and focus. In addition, you must work with

    superior technology, have sound money management strategies and develop a thorough knowledge of the markets. Of

    most importance, you must understand the risks involved in trading stocks. I realize that this information may be dry,

    but it is essential that you have this base of understanding before proceeding.

    DAYTRADING DEFINEDThe professional daytrader is a person who trades stocks in the office of a registered broker dealer. With the rightamount of training, experience and proper communications, some of these traders will eventually trade remote fromtheir homes.

    Registered broker dealer firms provide the direct access communications (T1 lines) and electronic execution

    equipment/software that puts these traders on the same execution access level as the Merrill Lynchs and Goldman

    Sachss of the world. The software used for execution and monitoring the markets is often far more advanced than what

    Ive seen or used on major brokerage firms trading desks. Daytraders that work in this situation can compete on an

    execution basis with the NASD market makers and other electronic systems or ECNs.

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    Daytrading, by definition, means that you end each day flat, meaning you go home without any open positions at the end

    of the trading session. Daytrading is not taking home 500 shares of NEON at 44 on July 6, 1999 (see number 1 on chart),

    and watching it open on July 7, 1999, at 18 3/8 (see number 2 on chart). As you may recall, New Era of Networks, Inc.

    (NEON) announced a large earnings shortfall after the close on July 6, 1999. I use NEON as an example of the problems

    you can face by not ending each day flat.

    NEON Daily Chart6/15/99 to 7/9/99

    In the case of NEON, you would have lost most, if not all, ofyour equity and would have received a margin call that you

    would be unable to meet. No, this doesnt happen often, but it only has to occur one time to possibly put you out of

    business. The media then runs a story about the perils of daytrading which they, in reality, confuse with onlinebrokerage trading where the person just gambled and took a shot. That kind of trade is not what the day-to-day business

    of trading is about.

    ORDER EXECUTIONS AND ONLINE FIRMS

    For the most part, online brokerage firms route customer orders to other marke- making brokerage firms or direct tradesto thewholesalemarketmakingbrokerage firms such as Herzog, Knight/Trimark,and Sherwood. In returnfordoing so,they receive payment for this order flow or, in some cases, share in the profits of the firm to which they are sending theorder flow. In my opinion, this is a bad practice and is detrimental to the best execution regardless of a firms obligationto conduct regular and vigorous review of the quality of executions of orders sent to other market makers.

    The majority of these online firms are middlemen or conduits that just slow the process if you attempt to compete withprofessional daytraders by attempting to execute continuous daytrades through your onlinebroker. To their credit, most

    of these online brokers seek the active investor and dont claim they can provide the professional platform that

    direct-access firms provide for daytraders.

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    SOME OF THE SEC CONCERNS YOU SHOULD BE AWARE OF

    The three leading online complaints to the SEC for fiscal year ending June 1999 were:

    1. Difficulties in accessing accounts

    2. Failures or delays in executing orders

    3. Errors in processing orders

    Concern # 1

    Investors and traders must understand the issues and limitations of online investing. Demand has

    grown so quickly that many firms may have trouble staying ahead of the technology to handle the

    growth. You occasionally will experience delays on these new systems.

    In the meantime, you may have trouble getting online or receiving timely confirmations of trade

    executions. You should not always expect instantaneous executions and reporting. There can

    and will be delays in electronic systems. You should explore and understand options and

    alternatives to executing and confirming your orders if you encounter online problems.

    TRANSLATION: You cant expect to succeed in daytrading if you are unable to enter a market or marketable limit

    order and get an instantaneous execution and confirmation. If you thought you bought your stock at 50, but the price

    wasnt confirmed and the stock is now trading at 49 1/4 as you receive a 50 confirmation, you will reach your risk of ruin

    level very quickly and be out of business. The investor that paid 50 for a long-term portfolio doesnt have a problem, but

    the daytrader that must keep losses to a 1/4 - 3/8 was unable to because of system delay. You must deal with a firm that

    has a trading order desk that you can reach by the phone under all conditions.

    Concern # 2

    The SEC wants all investors to be aware of how quickly stock prices can actually move,

    especially among the more volatile sectors like technology and Internet stocks. The price you see

    on the screen as you enter your order doesnt necessarily mean that you will always be able to get

    that price in a rapidly changing market. You should take precautions to ensure that you do not endup paying more for a stock than you intended or can afford. One way to do this is to use a limit

    order rather than a market order when submitting a trade in a fast moving stock.

    TRANSLATION: In fast markets and peak volume periods, dont expect to daytrade through an online broker without

    substantial risks.There have been some horror stories of people that placed market orders in fast moving internet stocks

    and hot IPOs that got executed many points away from what they saw on their screens. This resulted in major financial

    losses to many of these people. You must understand the risk associated with trading in a fast-moving market. Before

    you attempt to daytrade as a business, you must grasp these execution skills and implement the necessary direct-access

    communications.

    Concern # 3Investors buying securities on margin may not fully understand the risks involved. In volatile

    markets, investors who have put up an initial margin payment for a stock may find themselves

    being required to provide additional cash (maintenance margin) if the price of the stock

    subsequently falls. This is where many newer daytraders run into problems.

    If the funds are not paid in a timely manner, the brokerage firm has the right to sell a securities

    position and charge any loss to the investor. When you buy stock on margin, you are borrowing

    money. As the stock price changes, you may be required to increase the cash investment. You

    should make sure that you do not over-extend.

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    TRANSLATION: Dont buy it on margin if you dont have the allocated cash reserve to pay for it in cash. As

    mentioned earlier, a simple margin example of a trade that recently occurred was New Era of Networks, Inc. (symbol

    NEON). The NEON example will highlight margin risk.

    THREE TRADING EXAMPLES

    Examples:

    Trader A: started with $25,000 of capital and his rule was to use margin, but for no more than the

    total capital of $25,000.

    CASH MARGIN

    7/6/99 Trade B 500 shares NEON @ 44 $22,000.00 $11,000.00

    7/7/99 S 500 shares NEON @ 18 3/8 $9,187.50

    LOSS $12,812.50

    STARTING CAPITAL $25,000.00

    TRADING LOSS -$12,812.50

    ENDING CAPITAL $12,187.50

    NEON announced negative financial results after the close on 7/6/99, and the stock opened on 7/7/99 at 18 3/8. Trader A

    said enough and bailed out while he tried to figure out how to make 100% on the remaining $12,187.50 of capital to just

    get back to even.

    Examples:

    Trader B: started with $11,000 of capital, was excited about the NEON story and decided tomaximize the position by utilizing the maximum regulation T-margin allocation which is

    currently 2:1.

    CASH MARGIN

    7/6/99 Trade B 500 shares NEON @ 44 $11,000.00 $22,000.00

    7/7/99 S 500 shares NEON @ 18 3/8 $9,187.50

    LOSS $12,812.50

    STARTING CAPITAL $11,000.00

    TRADING LOSS -$12,812.50

    ENDING CAPITAL -$1,812.50

    Trader B went for the roses and got the skunk. No more capital, wiped out and owed money to the brokerage firm.

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    Trader A vs. Trader B

    Trader A made a better margin decision than Trader B because he could have met a margin call and still had capital left,which was not the case for Trader B, who had a deficit capital position and had to ante up cash to the brokerage firm.

    As we progress in this course, we will discuss Trader As and Trader Bs understanding of money management,

    knowledge of the risks inherent in various types of stocks, and a trading plan that is geared to increasing capital rather

    than losing 50 to 100% on one trade or investment.

    Almost forgot, thank you for reminding me. There is a Trader C.

    Trader C: started with $15,000 of capital, carried no positions home overnight, took no more

    than 1/4 - 3/8 point loss per trade, and takes trades in stocks that have a potential for 1 to 1 1/2

    point profit.

    On 6/6/99, Trader C made three trades in NEON, profiting on one out of the three, yet used correct money management.

    1. B 500 shares @ 42 1/8 S 500 shares @ 41 7/8 -$125.00 -1/4

    2. B 500 shares @ 42 S 500 shares @ 41 11/6 -$156.25 -5/16

    3. B 500 shares @ 42 1/4 S 500 shares @ 43 3/8 +$562.50 +1 1/8

    +$281.25

    Commissions -$90.00

    +191.25

    NEON opened at 41 3/4 on 6/6/99 and closed at 45 1/4. This is just an example and not an actual trade, but it points out

    what a good daytrader is trying to accomplish. Keep your losses to a 1/4- 3/8 of a point and try tomake 1 point if the

    trade allows you to manage it that way.

    In daytrading, you are limited by time and range, so you must manage your average loss and size with discipline. Trader

    C was correct on only one of three entries and still made a few bucks rather then being out of business on 7/7/99 when

    NEON opened at 18 3/8.

    THE BOTTOM LINE

    The SEC says that while new technology available to retail investors may resemble that of

    professional traders, retail investors should exercise caution before imitating the style of trading

    and risks undertaken by market professionals. Strategies such as daytrading can be highly

    risky, and retail investors engaging in this activity should do so with funds they can afford

    to lose.

    SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt summed up his statement regarding online trading by saying

    to all investors, whether you invest online, on the phone, or in personknow what you are

    buying, what the ground rules are, and what level of risk you are assuming.

    TRANSLATION: If you expect to daytrade as a business, you need direct-access technology. Online brokerages are

    not equipped to provide that necessary speed. Decide whether you are an active investor or a daytrader. Getting caught

    in the middle can be dangerous to your bank account. When you start any business, you must make a financial

    investment up front. It is no different in daytrading. You must decide what amount of money can you afford to loose if

    the business goes bad and still not have it affect your financial structure.

    The SEC has opened up the markets to investors at an unusual level, especially with after-hours trading coming, but

    they expect investors to be prepared for whatever level of risk you undertake.

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    DAYTRADING TODAY

    Daytrading today is at a higher fever pitch than the takeover mania of the 1980s. Deals were being announced daily andspeculating investors were buying stock on any viable rumor. Many of these people played the deals with options, butthey had very little or no knowledge of option premium, time decay, implied volatility and the simple fact that mostoptions expire worthless. There were some spectacular success stories, but in the end, far more horror stories astakeover mania crashed and burned.

    Enter the 1990s and assets under management by mutual funds exploded. The public was in the market like neverbefore. The seeds were now sown for daytrading to emerge as a viable business.

    The opportunity to succeed at daytrading is higher now than at any time during the past 25 years because of the

    following reasons:

    1. Extended Bull Market

    2. Momentum Investing

    3. Deregulation of fixed commissions in 1975, which are still shrinking

    4. SECs approval of futures on the S&P 500 and now on some other equity indexes. This is the

    Holy Grail for a daytrader. Volatilitywithout volatility there is no daytrading. Program

    trading and the ability of large players to manipulate the equity futures, and thus the

    underlying stocks, create more frequent opportunities to daytrade stocks with extendedaverage daily ranges.

    5. SECs allowing direct access to the markets through ECNs, DOT machines and many of the

    other technologies that crop up every week. This has led to the evolution of online investing,

    which is still just beginning. After-hours trading will present even more opportunity along

    with the obvious risks of illiquid markets.

    TECHNOLOGY

    You should view technology from the standpoint of what gives you the fastest reliable data and execution capability.You cant compete with professional daytraders if you are using buy and hold equipment with delayed order entry. Thevarious levels from best to worst are outlined and the list follows.*

    * Because there aremany goodcompanies that provide these services,I will not recommendanyspecific ones to you. I adviseyou to selectthe one

    that fits your needs the best.

    1. Trading in the office of a registered broker dealer

    Communications: T-1 dedicated telecommunication line, backed up with same, or at a

    minimum, dedicated ISDN lines for backup.

    Software: Direct-access software that enables you to execute directly with market makers,

    ECNs and a super-DOT link to exchanges for listed executions. These software packages

    like Redi Plus and Cybertrader have analysis modules which enhance trade selection and

    monitoring. The dedicated phone lines are provided by the Bell Atlantics and MCIs of

    the world.

    2. Trading in a remote location (office or home) and using a dedicated telecommunication

    hookup such as a 56k-frame relay, ISDN, or in the case of very heavy volume traders, a T-1

    is, of course, expensive. The 56k and ISDN are the most common and costs vary as to the

    distance and location. Your prospective direct-access firm will provide you with the

    necessary specs and cost.

    3. Trading through a direct-access firm using ADSL technology is now becoming widely

    available. This gives you data-transfer rates at 768 Kbps downstream and 384 Kbps

    upstream; that is excellent. A user told me she downloaded a 100-MB file in ten minutes. The

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    cost is about $80 per month plus $249 for the DSL router which they give you free on a

    two-year sign up. If you are trading in a remote location with multiple users, you qualify for

    the business hookup, which is SDSL. For $295 per month, you get 768 Kbps downstream and

    768 Kbps upstream which is one half of a T-1 bandwidth. The better deal for $399 is 1.1

    Mbps both ways, which is basically equivalent to a T-1. The hardware and installation are

    free.

    4. Cable box or ISDN internet hookup using software provided by direct-access firms. This,

    like level #3 above, is fast but subject to any ISP problems that are more frequent than thetelephone companys downtime.

    Note: If possible, get two different internet service providers and two computers. You

    should get uninterrupted internet service if possible.

    5. Trading through a direct-access firm with a 56k-modem connection. You might get by with

    this but you have to allow for the slowness that may occur if that is the type of trading you

    expect to do.

    Note: When you use software provided by a direct-access firm, you should use, at a

    minimum, a 350 MHz machine with a 128-MB of memory. You can lease this size and

    larger for $100$125 per month and trade up if needed at the end of one year. Also, do

    yourself a favor and get two monitorsthe bigger the better.

    THE BUSINESS

    If you are to succeed at the daytrading business, you have to run it like one. At the end of the trading day you take noposition home overnight. By adhering to this discipline you avoid the overnight risks that traders A&B both had withNEON. Daytrading is limited by time and the average range of the stock, but you will be in better position to controlyour risk and the size of your losses. This is the key part of the traders equation.

    The average size of a daytraders profit will be smaller than that of a short-term position trader because of time and

    range. Daytraders will be stopped out much quicker than position traders due to daily market noise such as programs

    and announcements from brokerage firms and the companies themselves. The most important thing you must

    manage as a daytrader is the size of your loss. Secondly, you must manage a winning trade to maximize the profiton each trade. Your motto will become make a pointlose a quarter.And you want to do this as many times as

    you can.

    Daytraders can maximize margin (Regulation T)

    EXAMPLE: $50,000 of capital with Reg. T margin of 2:1 can control $100,000 in stocks. You can liquidate your

    position(s) and repeat the procedure time and again over the trading day.

    Proprietary traders working foran NASD brokerdealer areallocated increased leverage,which variesaccordingto each

    firm. To qualify as a proprietary trader, you must be U-4 registered at the firm, pass series 7 and series 63 (or 62) and

    then pass the new series 55. This, of course, assumes you qualify as a trader.

    Daytrading margin of your full capital is certainly not as risky as overnight carry, but if they stop trading in a stockbefore you can liquidate your position and the news is bad, you might find yourself in the same position as trader B.

    Daytraders Equation

    Maximum % of profitable trades + Maximum profit per trade Small losses x Multiple trades =

    SUCCESSFUL DAYtRADER

    This equation is the real money management of daytrading. Place it where you can see it the entire trading day to remind

    you of the objectivemake money while controlling risk.

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    MAXIMUM % OF PROFITABLE TRADES

    Daytraders, in an effort to keep losses small, will get stopped out often and this makes it hard to maintain a highpercentage of profitable trades. Our trading plan is to select the most promising opportunities; that is the stocks whichare most likely to move in the direction of the trend with maximum range.

    In order to accomplish this, you will select from the strongest of the institutional stocks that have pulled back from their

    swing point highs or are coming out of consolidation in the direction of the trend (sells reversed).

    You will be even more profitable if you learn to recognize the dynamics of supply and demand and not just some shapeof a pattern or a formation. Buyers and sellers are constantly making decisions and we, as traders, want to be on the same

    team that is currently winning the war. We will cover these dynamics later in the course. Meanwhile, for practice when

    you are watching your stock(s), focus on:

    1. Where the volume is trading, on the bid, midpoint or the ask.

    2. What are the bid and ask doingmoving up or down?

    3. Is the stock showing strong relative strength versus the days trend?

    4. How does the stock react to programs?

    5. Does the volume increase on up days and decline on down days (sells reversed)?

    6. Where are the blocks trading, on upticks or downticks?

    7. Is stock closing better or worse than its VWAP (volume weighted average price)?

    It is not a pattern or system that makes you profitable, but rather the dynamics that bring life to the stocks

    pattern. I will cover all these topics in the upcoming weeks.

    MAXIMUM PROFIT PER TRADE

    The stocks we look for must have room to run, which means an average daily range of two points or more. When youenter the trade, a good portion of the range should be available for profit. This is not a factor if your entry is above theprevious close, but it can be if you are entering from a five-minute chart pattern. Most traders have a tendency to takeprofits prematurely as they get nervous when a stock makes its normal pullback. You havent traded if you haventexperienced taking a quick 1/2-point profit and then watched the stock run another 1-1/2 points. You probably sat therefrozen, unable to pull the trigger again as the stock made new highs. Managing your trade to higher profit levels afternormal pullbacks is harder than it seems. You start thinking about the money, and your emotions get in the way.

    Part of your learning process is to understand the normal characteristics of the stocks you trade. Is it a 1/2 up, 1/4 back, or 1

    point up, 5/8 back? Once you understand the normal pattern of the stock, then you must decide by watching the dynamics

    of the stock as it trades to determine if the intraday trend has changedis supply definitely larger then demand, or is it just

    backing off on light volume and small programs. Your decision will determine whether you hold or exit the trade.

    The better you get at understanding and recognizing the dynamics, the more proficient you will get at selecting stocks

    about to accelerate, which will help in maximizing the profit per trade.

    SMALL LOSSESThis is the part of the equation where you have the most control. If you can manage your losses, the profits will have ahigher likelihood of happening even with average stock selection. It takes discipline and the proper mental attitude todetermine your stop levels and execute the stop as planned.

    What usually happens to new traders is they determine, for example, a stop loss level of no more than $300 per trade.

    This can be .30 on 1000 shs or 1 point on 300 shs. It all depends on your money management plan and available capital.

    The stock gets to the stop level for the trader that is using a mental stop. The trader hesitates to pull the trigger because he

    sees a quick uptick, but the stock then ticks 1/8 below his stop level and is offered there. The trader freezes and is now in

    a position of hope, which is forbidden territory for the daytrader. If you keep taking bigger losses than normal, you will

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    have to increase the profit on your winning trades and/or the percentage of profitable trades. It is easier to control your

    loss side than to accomplish both of those because as a daytrader, we must trade under the limitation of a shorter time

    period and range of the stock. (Repeated for a reason!)

    My advice to you is you will be better off if after you receive confirmation of execution, you immediately enter

    either a stop loss or a stop loss limit order to protect your exit from the trade. This takes the judgement out of your

    hands and protects you from your emotional-self, which is almost always wrong. This one rule alone will go miles in

    improving your trading.

    The next most important thing to keeping your losses small is you dont have to wait until your stop loss point is hit

    before you exit a trade. When you enter a trade, the market must prove to you the trade is correct by turning profitable

    within a short period of time. If the stock or the market dynamics change after your entry and appear negative, just get

    out of your position. Dont wait for the market to collect your $300 by taking out your stop. It is better to exit the trade. If

    you are correct, you save some money. You are better off entering the trade again as it turns around and trades up

    through your entry point.

    MULTIPLE TRADES

    You dont have to be a math major to figure out that if your percentage of profitable trades is positive, you want tomaximize the amount of trades. A good example of this would be all the recent splits we have seen in many of the top

    institutional-trading stocks such as GPS, EMC and DELL. Instead of average daily ranges of 34 points, they are now1 3/42 1/4 points.

    This decrease in range size makes it tougher to get the 11 1/2 point profit from each trade, but you can take a larger

    amount of 1/23/4 point profits and do it more often because these kinds of stocks have what I call an excellent Travel

    Range.

    A recent example of travel range is IBM on July 21, 1999 (shown on next page). The stock opened at 127 1/2, down 3/4

    from the previous days close. We dont include this gap down in our calculation. On the day, IBM ranged from a high

    of 129 3/4 to a low of 126 7/8, only 2 7/8 points.

    THE TRAVEL RANGE

    Measuring between intraday highs and lows as the day progresses, the travel range for IBM that day was 21.47 points, or16.8% if you divide that by the opening price of 127 1/2. It had 11 moves of one point or more. After the opening at127.50, the sequence is as follows from left to right:

    +.81 (-1.31) +1.43 (-1.375) +1.875

    (-.68) +1.50 (-1.6875) +1.75 (-2.25)

    +.625 (-.56) +.56 (-1.06) +.68

    (-1.06) +2.25

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    Yes, it was a volatile day with the S&P futures and program trading, but there are many stocks that have travel ranges at

    least twice their average daily ranges. Do the homework and find these stocks because when you do you will realize that

    stocks take on their own life because of such things as specialist tendencies, active options traders and market makers,

    programs and of course the institutions (The Generals).

    There is another group called the accelerators, which we will discuss in another chapter.

    CONCLUDING REMARKSAfter reading this chapter ask yourself if you will do the following:

    1. Understand the risks of daytrading.

    2. Take no position home overnight.

    3. Act on what the market is telling you and not what you hear or read. Free yourself of any

    preconceived notions of imposing your will on the market.

    4. Cut your loss on a position when the market proves it not correct. This doesnt mean you wait

    for your stop to get hit before you exit.

    5. Work hard at developing a trading plan to select trades, manage trades and exit trades.

    6. Select the technology and communications necessary for direct access execution.

    7. Manage the Traders Equation. You must understand how when each part of this equation

    changes it effects your profitability. Manage the loss side and your hard work will takecare of

    the profit side.

    These are all cut-and-dry rules. As boring as they are, they must become the cornerstone of your trading. You may want

    to re-read this chapter, as the next part will start in on the good stuff.

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    PART TWO: HOW TO SELECT THE BEST STOCKS TO TRADE EVERY DAY

    STOCK SELECTION

    The stock selection process that I believe is most beneficial to daytraders is one which focuses on the primary stocks thatinstitutions depend on to outperform the S&P 500. These stocks demonstrate strong relative and absolute performanceto the Index. Most of these stocks are in the S&P 500 index and have excellent liquidity.

    Our job as traders is to identify the stocks that the Generals are currently adding to and overweighting in their portfolios.

    It is the herd mentality which creates the momentum that leads to many of the parabolic rises we have seen in this bull

    market. There is nothing better than getting good entry in strong momentum stocks that have pulled back, only to have

    theGenerals and momentum players take them up again.Also helping this process are theACCELERATORS, which

    are the hedge funds, program traders and sometimes the specialists and option market makers.

    To better appreciate the stock selection process, I will try to give you some background on how a growth fund manager

    thinks and how he builds the fund portfolio.

    HOW FUND MANAGERS THINK

    In order to beat the S&P500, institutions must be in the right sector and in the right names. Their goal is not just to matchthe S&P 500; they want to beat it. In order to achieve this, they must differ from the Index. To help accomplish this, theyhave built excellent internal research capabilities and, in addition, they have access to the best brokerage firm researchthat is available. There are many talented analysts and portfoliomanagers at these institutions, so there isnt much left tochance in the search for good companies. They get page-one information because of the millions of dollars they pay incommissions to the brokerage firms.

    Most growth fund managers are bottoms-up stock pickers, which means they closely examine the business prospects of

    each company and build their portfolios stock-by-stock. They adhere to the fact that stock prices tend to follow earnings

    over time and to the extent that earnings forecasts are revised upward or downward, stock prices often will head the

    same direction. Most managers dont try to predict near-term stock performance. Instead, they spend their time looking

    for companies that can grow earnings faster than the overall market and that are trading at attractive valuations. There

    are many factors that can make stocks rise or fall over the short term, but in the long run, earnings determine stock

    valuations. Therefore, a fund manager looking for the best chances of appreciation will choose those stocks that are

    fairly priced or undervalued.

    When mutual funds receive new money, a fund manager will often add to existing positions as long as the fundamentals

    remain solid for a particular stock. This assumes a stock still has strong relative and absolute performance to the S&P

    500, and it is this buying that creates a trend. A fund manager will attempt to buy good stocks on pullbacks and sell weak

    stocks on strength. Many of the momentum players just want to keep buying if the stock is up, but as soon as they have

    any sizable amount of shares offered to them by a brokerage firms trading desk, they might just disappear and turn

    seller themselves because the stock has reached a supply level and the stock cant be pushed any higher until the

    seller(s) complete what they are trying to get done.

    The herd mentality prevails when it gets down to the high relative performance stocks such as we have seen in the

    technology and Internet sectors. A fund manager may think there is a high degree of risk in certain tech stocks, but thosecompanies may be producing fast earnings and helping the performance of the fund in the battle to beat the S&P 500.

    (So they might even stay too long.) This helps prolong the upside action as we get multiple upside breakouts after brief

    pullbacks. With a little help from momentum players, programs, hedge funds and the media hype that goes with these

    stocks, you are given many opportunities for strong daytrading action.

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    THE AOL EXAMPLE

    A good example of this mentality is AOL, which was the largest contributor to several funds performance during thelast part of 1998 and the first quarter of 1999. It had a parabolic move to the upside. Only those managers that had thestomach to bet on investor psychology instead of visible earnings got the full performance benefit, but many jumped onthe bandwagon at higher and higher levels afraid to be left at the gate. Surprisingly, even some value funds rationalizedreasons to buy AOL. While arguing that AOL made sense for a value fund is a bit of a stretch, it does show how a herdmentality can drive a stock substantially higher. I hope those managers made good sales on the way down. If the fund

    managers decide to play the AOL game again, price and volume will let us know the GAME IS ON.

    PORTFOLIO ADJUSTING

    Institutions are constantly increasing or trimming existing portfolio positions based on valuations, and they are alsoadding new positions or deleting underperformers from the portfolio. For example, a fund might have held amaximum of 10 million shares of AOL and because of the first-quarter froth and subsequent weakness, the fund mayhave cut back to 4 million shares. With the stock now down over 60% from its highs, fund managers might againdecide to start adding to the position. Once the decision to add to a position is made, it often attracts the attention ofother large players. This is what trend reversals are all about. Reversals like this usually take place around the200-day moving average as more institutional players become confident that the move is for real. As the perceptionsinks in, the Generals jump aboard.

    Another example would be an institution that is taking a bearish top-down view of the market and now must realign

    its sector weightings. The theme would favor stable earnings, quality, low beta and yield, which translates to

    consumer staplesutilities, energies, and maybe gold. Energies and golds both usually do relatively well in a bear

    market. This defensive list of groups would be overweighed and sectors such as high-beta technology stocks would

    be underweighed.

    This flow of money moving between sectors is very visible because most institutions are on the same page. Its just that

    some are ahead of the pack. A good example of this is when many of the institutions loaded up on some of the techs

    during the market crack from JulyOctober of 1998. Two other recent examples of money flows going into unloved

    sectors are the energies and basics during March and April 2000 (see charts later in chapter).

    The selection process will detect these moves based on price and increased volume, in addition to increasing relative

    strength. When stocks trend, they become tradable for daytraders as the many different institutional players getinvolved.

    Daytraders that select stocks from a matrix of high relative strength and earnings are, by definition, picking the stocks

    with the best technical and fundamental prospects to move significantly higher. The institutions will have to own and

    overweight many of these stocks if they are to beat the S&P 500. Their research analysts will continue to be our research

    department.

    The following charts address the topics that I have just discussed. I provide brief analyses at the bottom of each chart

    that should draw together the various points I want to emphasize to you.

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    America Online (AOL)

    1. & 2. WRB (Wide-Range Bar) breakouts on panic volume. If you did not get in at 1, the left-

    behind portfolio managers entered at 2, afraid they would miss a further major move.

    3. This run up from an ascending triangle was again on a WRB, or Runaway Move as Mark

    Boucher refers to in his course. He refers to them as a Thrust Breakout, Breakaway LAP and

    Breakaway GAP.

    This AOL example contains three favorite institutional patterns that they will aggressively attempt to breakout, market

    permitting.

    Texas Instruments(TXN)

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    1. Breakout of nine-month base on good volume. This breakout was confirmed by S&P 500

    trend (see Spyder Chart).

    2. The 10-week and 40-week EMAs were both rising and the 10-week was above the 40-week.

    3. The S&P 500 was also above its 10- and 40-week EMAs.

    4. TXN was now trending as it traded above both its 10-week and 40-week EMA.

    5. TXN became a daytraders stock at this point, and now you start looking at your daily chartsfor entry at inflection points which we will cover in Parts 3 and 4.

    SPDRs (SPY)

    1. SPY, which is a proxy for the S&P 500, broke out to a new level and is above the rising 10-

    week and 40-week EMAs.

    2. The trend in both TXN and SPY were up.

    3. You want to daytrade advancing stocks in an uptrending market.

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    Phix Semiconducter Index (SOX)

    1. Positive Divergence preceding breakout 2 above 40 week EMA.

    2. The breakout by TXN from a nine-month base was confirmed by the rising trend in SOX.

    3. Five-month trading-range breakout preceded by rising lows in the range. The semiconductor

    stocksentered a prime daytrading zone after this breakout because of thestrongmomentum.

    Microsoft (MSFT)

    1. Breakout of ascending triangle on a WRB(wide-range bar) with expandingvolume. (See 3).

    2. Bottom fishing as MSFT broke below and closed above 40-week EMA for the week and had

    higher highs and higher lows the next two weeks (see 4 & 5). During this time, the Generals

    were adding to their positions.

    6. GREAT DAYTRADING ZONE, MOMENTUM PLAYERS WERE IN BIG.

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    Caterpillar (CAT)

    1. There was a rush to cyclicals such as CAT, DD, and AA as the Generals all jumped in at the

    same time.

    2. Volume had been building prior to WRB breakout.

    3. Institutions love to break them out of the consolidations just above the 50- and 200-day

    moving averages.

    DuPont (DD)

    1. Breakout above rising 50 and 200 EMA that is turning upward.

    2. Breakout is on good volume.

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    KEY POINTS RE-CAP

    Before we identify and discuss the filters to select your daytrading stocks (same filters can be used for short-termposition traders), lets quickly recap some key points:

    We want stocks that have:

    Strong relative and absolute performance versus the S&P 500

    Excellent liquidity, which means good volume and narrow spreads.

    The best technical and fundamental prospects to move higher

    Are members of S&P 500 or NDX 100 indexes, so we can benefit from the added volatility that program trading

    provides. If the market shifted away from big caps, which is unlikely near term, we will make the same

    adjustments the Generals make to outperform the S&P 500.

    Uptrending stocks (sells reversed) are better daytrading stocks than range bound stocks. We want themomentum

    players on our team and as many accelerators that want to play the game as possible.

    Stocks with volatility and good average daily range.

    Use the Generals as our research department. Let them select the stocksno one does it better. We will select those

    stocks to daytrade that are in the strongest uptrends and where we spot those situations when the buyers are moreaggressive than the seller(s). In the final part of the process its what IBM is going to do in the next two minutes that

    matters most. Remember, though, that you dont go to war unless you prepare for war.

    Understand that stocks will present more dynamic short term trading opportunities when they are under or fairly valued

    and they run out of buyers at the extreme valuations.

    GENERAL FILTERS

    A. SkimInvestors Business Daily (IBD) and The Wall Street Journal for any stock specific

    news or pending economic announcement.

    B. Review the market action of the prior daywhich I keep by handit takes 10 minutes andall the data is available from IBD. If you keep it by hand, you think about it, and you have

    records of how the market reacted at certain inflection points such as volume, breadth,

    moving average, swing point highs and lows. You would be amazed at how often markets

    repeat. This simple worksheet will be an exhibit in chapter 5 with a full month of data

    recorded for you.

    C. Check the earnings calendar for next four weeks and the brokerage firms upgrades and

    downgrades. The site I use for this is www.dailystocks.com. This site is free, comprehensive

    and includes many other links of information and data you will find useful.

    SPECIFIC FILTERS

    TRADINGMARKETS.COM Interactive RS Investigators Search

    This filter gives you the top relative strength stocks versus all other stocks from a universe of

    5,000 most actively traded stocks. It is not the RSI (Wells-Wilder RSI) that measures the stock

    against itself, which we all use as a momentum indicator. The filter covers the past 12 months

    weighted more to recent action. If the stock has corrected sharply but still shows an RS of 98 or

    99, its because the12 month advance was significant and thecurrent correction is probably small

    in terms of percentage of the overall advance.

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    Search # 1:

    RS value = between 8099

    Price Filter = more than 25 (only because of recent splits, the higher-priced stocks will give you

    better absolute move)

    Volume Filter = more than 400,000 shares

    The volume is what the stock traded that day, not the average daily volume of the stock. I prefer the stock to have anaverage daily volume of at least 500,000 shares for the past 3050 days. The filter for 400,000 allows for a lower-than-

    normal volume day.

    Search #2: The second part of the filter is to run it again with RS values between 60 and 79.

    This catches stocks that might be correcting back to their 50- and 200-day Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs),

    which present some good opportunities. After these corrections you will often see the Generals add good stocks on

    short-term market weakness and where the brokerage firms like to time their recommendations.

    Search #3: The third part of the filter is to run it with the RS value between 90 and 99 and no other criteria. This gives

    you the top relative strength stocks of the 5000-stock universe, regardless of price and volume.

    The first three examples give you an idea of whether a stock is in a runaway mode, pulling back briefly from swing point

    highs, or consolidating after Wide Range Bar (WRB) thrusts or gaps. To understand the filters and which stocks arefound, you must go through each chart so you get the feel for any lag in the filter.

    Search #4: If you decide to trade the 50-dollar-and-over big-cap stocks only, then a good filter to use is:

    RS Value: between 8099

    Price Filter: more than 50

    Value Filter: more than 750,000

    Go to Stock Scanner to input the above parameters.

    TRADINGMARKETS.COM ADX TREND FINDER

    If I had to choose one filter from TRADINGMARKETS.COM it would be this one: The higher

    the ADX, the stronger the trend up or down. When you combine ADX with Plus Directional

    Movement (+DMI) and Minus Directional Movement (DMI) you will always discover a good

    trade opportunity. The ADX filter allows you a maximum of 10 values. For uptrends you set up

    +DMI > DMI (reverse equation for downtrends).

    Search #1:

    ADX Value 1 10

    PX Filter more than 30

    Vol. Filter more than 500,000

    Trend Filter +DMI > DMI

    The next step is to increase your ADX value by 10 until you run out of stocks (11-20, 21-30, 31-40 etc), but

    everything else remains the same.

    Yes, I know the higher the ADX the stronger the trend, but you are forgetting about directional movement. Oftentimes a

    stock that has had a WRB or gap breakout will consolidate and trade sideways before the next runaway move or reversal

    in trend. These consolidations are great spots for the Generals to show their cards. Halliburton (HAL) gave us a warning

    on August 4th with increased volume that it might break out of an ascending triangle. The next day we got good entry at

    48 1/8, and the stock traded to 50 7/8 before closing at 50 1/2. On August 4th, the energies all did well on increased

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    volume, which told us the Generals were working the floor and had to reach for stock. Baker Hughes (BHI), which you

    see on Search #1, has an ADX value of only 10, but is one of the top 10 stocks in percentage gained for the last six

    months with an 83.5% gain. We want to play this stock as soon as we see a volume signal fromthe Generals with a close

    in the top part of its daily range. (Charts illustrating this follow).

    By starting with a low position ADX and working upward, we are sure to catch all of the consolidations that usually lead

    to excellent moves or the beginning of a trend reversal. When you look at the charts, start with the highest ADX values

    first because thats where you will find the 3 5 8 day pullbacks, WRB Thrusts, and dynamite short term continuation

    patterns. When you get to the lower ADX values, you pick up the consolidations such as the HAL and BHI. As long as+DMI is > than DMI, all of the ADX values can find you an opportunity to monitor for a high probability trade.

    Baker Hughes (BHI)

    1. After a big, 5-wave down move, BHI forms a 1-2-3 bottom.

    2. At B1, the Generals come for the stock in size, breaking it out of the ascending triangle,

    ascending wedge, or whatever else you would like to call it. The key point is that at the B1

    inflection point, BHI traded above the highs of the previous 45 weeks and did so on big

    volume. The GAME WAS ON at that point.

    3. At B2, BHI makes a new high above swing point 2 after making a high low at swing point 3.

    The stock trades and closes above both the 10- and 30-week EMAs. The trend at this point is

    up, and BHI becomes very tradeable regardless of whether you daytrade or position trade.4. At B3, will BHI breakout of this consolidating range? I dont know, but we will see the

    Generals give us a warning before it does. (Note: As I am writing this, BHI breaks out of the

    ascending triangle on good volume at 11:30 AM on 8/9/99 and is trading at 35 5/8, up 2 1/4).

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    Halliburton (HAL)

    1. (8/3/99) HAL closes in top of range.

    2. (8/4/99) Closes in the top of range on good increase in volume. The Generals look like they

    want to break it out. Entry will be 48 1/8 on 8/5.

    3. (8/5/99) HAL opens at 47 1/2 and gives good entry at 48 1/8 and trades to high of 50 7/8 and

    closes at 50 1/2. Volume is excellent.

    (8/6/99) Pullback day.

    (8/9/99) Surges to 51 3/4.

    Note: This was good daytrade and also good position trade.

    HAL Volume Table

    Date Open High Low Close Volume

    9-Aug-99 49 51.75 49 51.4375 3,692,300

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    CONCLUDING REMARKS

    After reading this chapter and working with the Filters, you will be on your way to gaining part of your edge, which is

    the selection of high octane trading stocks which have the following charactistics:

    Strong relative and absolute performance versus the S&P 500.

    Strong trending stock with high ADX and confirming directional movement.

    High RS and EPS combination which puts you in the top momentum stocks.

    Excellent liquidity and good average daily range.

    By selecting stocks with the best technical and fundamental prospects to move significantly higher, you will often be

    trading stocks that are beginning or are in the explosive stage of their trend.

    The key to that movement is for you to recognize early that the Generals are coming for the stock and then take only the

    well-planned entries you will learn or re-discover in parts 3 and 4.

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    Flow Summary

    Institution A gives sell order to broker A.

    Broker A sends order to NYSE floor broker for execution.

    Floor broker works with specialist to execute order.

    Broker A is calling other institutions trying to find a buyer for AOL. Sometimes the other institutions might be a

    seller of AOL, but wont tell broker A if they are working their order with, say, broker B.

    Broker B and the other brokerage firms are calling Institution A during normal course of business about stocks

    they have to buy and sell. Broker B tells Institution A that they are a large seller of AOL. Institution A doesntrespond because it is working a sell order with Broker A.

    Broker B and the other brokerage firms are also making calls to many of the same institutions that broker A called

    as a seller of AOL.

    Get the picture? Everyone now knows there is more than one institutional seller in AOL, and unless some buyers show

    up, the sellers will probably have to give up some price to get their orders completed.

    The following charts illustrate how to effectively select key inflection points for short sales in a stock that has lost

    momentum and sellers obviously are stronger than sellers (buys reversed).

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    AOL Chart 1

    1. Parabolic rise by AOL after breakout of Cup-and-Handle pattern at 91 3/8. A negative

    divergence developed on this momentum player induced move to top.

    2. It helps to utilize a curved trend line for parabolic moves which are usually broken by the first

    WRB reversal day as you see above.

    After momentum fades on a parabolic move, there are usually some outstanding shorting opportunities for the

    daytrader.

    In this case we saw a negative divergence, breaking of parabolic trend line, and WRB reversal day on strong volume that

    followed a mini blow-off top. AOL was now on your short side radar looking for a good entry point.

    AOL Chart 2

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    (In the following discussion, please refer to this volume table).

    4/5/99 A: WRB to a new high.

    4/6/99 Day 1: WRB to new high on strong volume, but closes below the midpoint of daily range.

    4/7/99 Day 2: Big reversal day on WRB. 20.625 points, which is the largest range of recent data. Volume is heavy as

    AOL closes below the open, below previous low and in bottom 30 percent of its range. It also closed below parabolic

    trend line.

    The close below the low of the previous Day 2 also confirmed change of direction and defined Day 1 as a swing point

    high.

    4/8/99 Day 3: Gave you a good short sale entry below 152 which was Day 2 low. Stock traded down to 148 before

    reversing and closing in top of range at 160.50. How did you manage your trade? In your trade plan you marked the 148

    level as another possible short sale entry point.

    Days 4, 5, and 6: Gyrated up and down in a fairly narrow range, but you must notice they couldnt close above Day 3

    close or high. Their opens and/or closes were all within Day 3s daily range. We have a consolidation that has now

    developed below the high, and we know that weplan to sell short breaking 148 low if AOL resolves to the downside.

    4/14/99 Day 7: Also closed within the daily range of Day 3, but this close on a WRB at bottom of its range at 150.875

    raised our short trade entry point to 150, which is Day 7s low.

    We still will enter a short sale below 148,but the Day-7 bar told us to enter first at a movebelow 150. If you look closely

    at Day-7 bar, you will see that it closed below the low of the last three days and below last seven closes. This told you the

    highest probability was down.

    4/15/99 Day 8: You get a trade through entry below 150 as the stock opened at 152.75 and went south to a low of 135.

    You could have added to your position as stock traded below 148. AOL closed the day at 143.875. Your next entry point

    is 1/8 below 135.

    4/16/99 Day 9 : Inside day closes at absolute bottom of its range at 139.75. Momentum is still down, so you decide to

    enter short 1/8 below 139.75 on Day 10. The close is below the open, below previous close, and at bottom of range after

    sharp drop told you the sellers were still in charge.

    4/19 Day 10: AOL opens at 142, gives you entry at 139.75 and an add, if so wanted, trading below 135. The stock hitintraday low of 112 before closing at 115.875. This was selling climax volume for AOL, as it rallied the next day on 42.7

    million shares.(see table)

    After a parabolic rise AOL lost momentum. Institution A started to sell stock as did Broker Bs seller, and then the

    process starts to feed on itself as portfolio managers rushed to the exits in fear of not booking profits at windfall prices.

    There was, without much doubt, some able hedge funds that with a particular options strategy were able to accelerate

    the stock move down and capitalize on the herd mentality. As a daytrader, you were still able, without the same

    information, to trade in the correct direction by reading the stock.

    You were able to enter trades at high-probabilty inflection points on the daily chart that indicated the ease of movement

    was down. When you can combine this with solid intraday patterns, you will get better at this business. The change in

    direction or reversal indicators we observed can be found on intradaytrading charts as well.

    On Chart II we discussed the initial three entries that saw AOL hit a low of 112. There were seven more good short-sale

    entries from the daily chart after AOL rallied to almost 90% of the 175.50 high, which is quite common for right

    shoulder tops, which you see with AOL. I marked them on the chart and also identified the reversal day preceding entry.

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    AOL Volume Table

    Date Open High Low Close Volume

    26-Apr-99 151 162.5 150.625 162 23,110,600

    23-Apr-99 146.75 147.25 141.6875 147 17,139,800

    22-Apr-99 150 153 144 148.6875 25,234,900

    21-Apr-99 130.5 144.5 127.9375 142.75 25,476,30020-Apr-99 115 130.25 113 128.6875 42,672,800 Rally

    Day 10 19-Apr-99 142 143 112 115.875 55,669,900 Selling Climax

    9 16-Apr-99 146.5 148.75 139.75 139.75 18,969,900

    8 15-Apr-99 152.75 152.75 135 143.875 40,297,400

    7 14-Apr-99 162 163.375 150 150.875 18,062,200

    6 13-Apr-99 158.5 164.25 156.75 159.3125 16,414,300

    5 12-Apr-99 152 159.8125 151.0625 157.875 21,168,100

    4 9-Apr-99 159 165.25 157.875 159.9375 16,286,400

    3 8-Apr-99 158 161.25 148 160.5 30,784,500

    2 7-Apr-99 170.125 172.625 152 158 33,010,300

    1 6-Apr-99 164.875 175.5 162.75 167.5 34,484,700 High

    A 5-Apr-99 152.25 167 152 166.9375 26,786,900

    1-Apr-99 152.6875 153 144.0625 150 22,138,400

    CHART SUMMARY

    When you analyze a potential trade, you are simply looking at the supply/demand situation of a stock. Is it higher highs

    and higher lows or lower highs and lower lows? Did the stock close above or below the midpoint of its daily range? Was

    the close in the top or bottom of its range? If it is to change direction, it must trade above or below the previous periods

    high or low, regardless of time frame. The longer the time frame, the more significant the move. As in our AOL

    example, the Generals cant hide. In this case, AOL ran into trouble on day 1 making a new high and just barely closing

    above the A days high and close. Day 1 closed below the midpoint of its range on heavy volume, which indicated the

    stock might change direction. On day 2 the stock made a significant reversal as it closed below its open and well below

    the Day 1 low. It reversed on heavy volume, closed in the bottom 30 percent of its range and also took out most of the A

    day WRB move to new highs.

    The sellers were clearly in charge as the Day-2 range expansion on a reversal day, which was a wider range than anything

    preceding the 175.50 high, was telling you that there was significant selling and sellers were giving up lots of price to get it

    done. All of this, and the breakingof the curved trendline spoke ofa change in trend and strong institutional participation.

    Day 7 clearly defined a further downside move when it closed below the low of the last three days and below the last

    seven closes. The more lows or closes, the higher probability of a move in direction in the close. At this point, the sellers

    were getting more anxious because that 148 low was staring them in the face. Also, any of the accelerators that were inposition to attack the sellers were salivating.

    The hedge funds with married puts and the specialist if he were short and in position to run the obvious 148 inflection

    point and stops. Any option players that were set up to put pressure on AOL and benefit from a significant move below

    150 could also help to accelerate the downmove.

    Go back and read this example several times so you start to think of what you are seeing. Its not about memorizing a

    pattern. You could look at ten identical head-and-shoulders tops, but each one tells a different story based on many of the

    things we have pointed out in the AOL example. When your skills improve, you wont even be thinking patterns anymore,

    just direction and the balance of buying or selling pressure. After all, we only have to be right for several minutes.

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    Biogen Chart (BGEN)

    I have included the Biogen (BGEN) chart as it includes three different buy situations. BGEN had made a 60.25 all-time

    high on 4/8/99, corrected down to 45.125 on 4/26/99 and was trading back up over its 10-, 50-, and 200-day EMAs. The

    pullback to the 20 and 50 day EMAs got my attention. They are oftentimes excellent entry points in up-trending stocks

    (sells reversed). Shorter pullbacks of 3-, 5-, 7- and 8-days often provide the strongest trades.

    TRADE A

    Day 1After a 5-bar (daily) pullback, BGEN re-crossed the 50 day EMA and closed at 54 1/16, at the top of its rangeand right at the 10 day EMA. The stock had made a swing point high of 58 1/8 (S1) on 1,787,000 shares and pulled back

    on average volume of less than 600,000 shares. The BTK (Biotech Index) had the same pattern as BGEN and with

    increasing RSI.

    Trading-plan entry point was 54 1/4 on Day 2, which was 1/16 above Day 1s high of 54 3/16.

    Day 2BGEN opened at 54 1/8 and got good entry at 54 1/4 and stock traded to a high of 56 1/4.

    TRADE B

    After a 3 bar thrust move from our Day 2 trade BGEN hit 60 3/16, just under the 60 1/4 high, then consolidated for 7

    days. (Sound like a familiar number?) All of either the opens or closes of the seven bars were within the range of the S2

    swing point bar.

    Day 1After two bottom-range closes on average volume of approximately 740,000, BGEN gives us an excellent

    outside reversal day on 1,029,500 shares and closes 1/8 under the top of the range at 59 5/8. This told me that someonewas anticipating a breakout to new highs above 60 1/4.

    Trading-plan entry point for day 2 was 59 7/8, or 1/8 over outside-days high of 59 3/4.

    Day 2This was a second entry after getting stopped out, but it proved successful as BGEN traded to a high of 66 1/2

    on 3,914,500 shares. (More about reversal days in the pattern chapter next part.) Once again, you saw that expansion in

    range on Day 1 with an increase in volume and close in the top of range. You had to sense that if we had a decent tape on

    Day 2, that the Generals would take it to new highs, but it wasnt an easy entry. The stock traded down to 58 3/8 before

    recrossing entry point. It happens often.

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    TRADE C

    After the big WRB move up on Day 2, BGEN went sideways for 10 days. This is very normal after these kinds of

    thrusts.

    Day 1BGEN closes in top of range on move that doubled the previous days light volume.

    Day 2Stock has a higher high, higher low, and closes in top 30% of its range just below the day 1 close. This was

    enough action to plan entry the next day for a possible run to new highs again. The momentum players love this kind of

    play.

    Day 3BGEN opens at 66 3/8, ticks to 66 1/4, and then takes off. We enter at 67 1/4, which is 1/8 above Day-2 high.

    Stock trades to high of 69 11/16.

    Now, I can draw some lines over the pattern, and we can make it a symmetrical triangle, trading range, or whatever other

    names you can think of, but who cares? You saw enough on Days 1, 2 and 3 that told you to get on the same jet as the

    Generals.

    BGEN Volume Table

    Date Open High Low Close Volume

    15-Jul-99 66.375 69.6875 66.25 69.1875 4,036,500 Day 3

    14-Jul-99 66.9375 67.125 64.25 66.1875 2,022,600 Day 2

    13-Jul-99 65.125 66.8125 62.8125 66.75 2,432,100 Day 1 Trade C

    12-Jul-99 65.5 65.875 64.5 64.5625 1,114,900

    9-Jul-99 67.375 67.375 64 64.875 4,406,100

    8-Jul-99 67 66.5 66.5 66.6875 5,207,100

    7-Jul-99 62.8125 65.25 61.625 64.9375 2,475,300

    6-Jul-99 65.5625 65.625 62.0625 63.0625 2,322,600

    2-Jul-99 67.375 67.5 65.5 65.8125 1,202,300

    1-Jul-99 64.6875 67 63.25 66.6875 1,796,800

    30-Jun-99 64.25 65.5625 62.375 64.3125 2,154,400

    29-Jun-99 59.875 66.5 58.375 63.6875 3,914,500 Day 2

    28-Jun-99 57.1875 59.75 56.1875 59.625 1,029,500 Day 1 Trade B

    TRADE ENTRIES

    The information-flow network is always in motion. The other part of the network is the brokerage firm analyst contact

    with themoney manager. Some accounts areon page oneandmight get some early pertinent research information aboutearnings, products, etc. which could influence their trading decision on any given day.

    Once you select your entry point from the daily chart, you must make a decision based on intraday market dynamics

    whether or not to enter the trade.

    The different entries you will be using are as follows:

    1. Stock trades through your entry price.

    2. Gap open (sell reversed) and pulls back to entry price.

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    3. Second entry. This is when you enter a trade, get stopped out and enter again if the stock

    trades back through your entry price. The market and stock dynamics must look good to take

    the trade. Remember, you dont necessarily have to get stopped out to scratch a trade. The

    dynamics are changing all day based on this information flow. If the market doesnt prove

    your trade correct in a reasonable time frame, or in the case ofbuys, if you see selling pressure

    get the upper hand, get out of your position. You can always re-enter if the dynamics

    change.

    We are always looking to enter the stock where we can identify the aggressive buyers or sellers. Not all stocks exhibitthis, but when the institutions are aggressive and they have competition on the same side of the trade, the identification

    process is much easier. A neutral stock is a dead stock until trading decisions are made to change the supply-demand

    equation.

    First, I will show you a simple table that I use to monitor the market dynamics. Second, I will cover some of the telltale

    indications of strong-stock dynamics. We will finish up with how specialists and market makers interact with the

    stocks.

    MARKET DYNAMICS

    This is a table to use so you can monitor changing market dynamics during the day. I keep this every 15 to 30 minutesdepending on activity in market. A top-to-bottom explanation of headings is as follows:

    SPU: Near term S&P 500 future which is now the September contract.

    SPX: S&P cash index.

    TICK : Net difference of all NYSE stocks trading on plus or minus ticks. I always keep an S&P 500 futures intraday

    tick by tech chart with the NYSE tick chart right below it. If you see the futures making lower lows and the NYSE ticks

    showing positive divergence and making higher lows (sells reversed), look for entry in stocks showing positive relative

    intraday strength.

    PREM: This is the difference between the S&P Future that you are monitoring and the S&P Cash Index. I use Track

    Data Fast Trac and can set the spread on my screen. If you dont have that on your system, you can just eyeball the two

    and subtract.

    A-D: This is the net difference between the advancing and declining stocks on the NYSE.

    UVOL: Up volume of stocks on NYSE.

    DVOL: Down volume on the NYSE.

    DOW: Dow Jones 30 stocks. Net change.

    NDX: NASDAQ 100 stocks. Net change.

    BD: 30-year treasury bond. Net change.

    SOX: Semiconductor stock Index.

    MSH: Morgan Stanley High-Tech Index.

    DRG: Drug Index

    RLX: Retail Index

    BKX: Banking Index

    XOI: Energy Index

    USX: Oil Service Index

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    RUT: Russell 2000 Small Cap Index

    These are the major sector indexes, and you can add indexes at the bottom if they are active, such as FPP, XBD, etc.

    Market Table

    This is actual market data for 8/19/99 9:45AM to 11:00AM EST. This is the table that monitors overall market

    dynamics.

    9:45 10:00 10:20 10:30 10:45 11:00

    SPU 10 10 10 8 14 14

    SPX 11 12 12 10 16 16

    TICK 482 474 528 172 181 470

    PREM 3.85 3.80 3.85 3.70 3.75 3.60

    A-D 1032 1014 958 908 1035 1098

    UVOL 13 26 44 48 51 58

    DVOL 41 61 93 99 126 149

    DOW 91 84 79 71 105 97NDX 21 27 33 28 45 44

    BD 9 5 9 8 5 6

    SOX

    MSH

    DRG

    RLX

    BKX

    XOI

    OSX + + + + + +

    RUT

    This table takes less than 45 seconds to complete. You round off numbers for the S&P Futures, all the averages and the

    volume figures. You use exact numbers for TICK, PREM, A-D, and BD. For the sectors, they are either plus orminus.

    At the bottom of the sheet, I make notes on which stocks are showing strong or weak intraday relative strength and look

    for set ups on the 5 minute charts.

    You should also make note of any key market news that should generate a reaction and observe how the market reacts to

    the news.

    Start to use this table on a daily basis, and you will start to see the relationships develop. Is it just program selling seeing

    that the sectors are all pretty strong and the breadth is still good, or are the Generals in there selling because up-volume /

    down-volume ratio keeps getting worse with all sectors turning minus?

    There are many market clues that you will only start to understand if you keep the table. After a period of time, your

    market feel will improve ten-fold, and this will improve your entry into good trades. You will observe that trending

    days will all have similar traits, as do theoverreactiondays that also provide good opportunity. Theneutral days tell you

    little by flat averages, but maybe breadth, volume or certain sectors will provide pertinent information.

    Note: I used 26 boxes for the table so you can record the market every 15 minutes if needed.

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    STOCK DYNAMICS

    Once you have located your stocks to trade either from the daily chart or from the 5-minute bar intraday chart, you are

    watching how those stocks are trading. Remember, we want to enter trades with the Generals on our side. It is not

    always so clear cut because there is so much noise on an intraday basis. You can enter a trade, get lucky, and have a big

    buy program kick in along with institutional buying and you feel smart in addition to making a profit. The problem is

    that it works the other way just as often.

    Option market makers are constantly buying or selling stock to hedge position risk, and programs go both ways. Thespecialist might have an axe to grind. Upstairs position traders might be working down a long or short position, and

    portfolio managers are making daily trading decisions at different levels. There is no crystal ball, so as daytraders, you

    must go with the flow. This means you can make all the correct decisions for entry into a trade but might not get proven

    correct because of the constant intraday noise that stops you out once or even twice before your stock trends. When that

    happens, most daytraders dont re-enter the trade and miss the major move that day.

    Stocks will still react to the major supply/demand pressure with minor interruptions by programs or some of the various

    noise mentioned above. We want to recognize which side is stronger before we enter the trade. Since we are in a bull

    market, we will assume we are buying stock. There are very simple and easy-to-see dynamics, but you must adhere to

    them with discipline in order to be successful.

    1. Did the stock open up on the day?

    2. Is it trading above the open?

    3. Is it trading above the VWAP? This is the volume weighted average price on the day.

    Several quote vendors such as Track Data, Bridge, and Bloomberg have this information.

    These are the only vendors I have used, so I am not aware of who else provides this

    information.

    When thebuyingpressure is neutral, or maybe there is onegood-sized institutional buyer that

    has no real competition, then the buyer will try to scale down the order. If the market is soft

    and the buyer is getting enough stock, then we wont notice the buyer. If the market firms up

    or another buyer or two show up, we would probably see some buying pressure build. No

    institution will pay up for stock unless they are able to get volume, but they must participate ifvolume starts to trade.

    When the stock is trading above the VWAP, it means the buying pressure is stronger, buyers

    are competing for stock, the market is probably advancing, option market makers are

    probably buying stock to hedge short calls, and if the specialist is on the right side of

    inventory, it means an up stock. When all these ingredients are put together and the stock is at

    a key inflection point on the daily or intraday chart, then daytraders have a good shot to make

    money.

    4. Is the volume trading on the bid side, or is it trading at the midpoint or offered side?

    We are buyers today in the stock, so we want to see it trading on the offered side (ask) or at

    least the midpoint. This tells us the buyers are aggressive, and it is a sellers market. All of you

    who have direct-access software have time and sales tickers that are dynamic and that you

    can load with stocks you are monitoring. This is an absolute necessity if you are entering off

    intraday patterns or retracements.

    5. Where is the volume trading? Bid, midpoint or ASK?

    Bridge and Bloomberg also provide this information. Two stocks could close in the top of the

    range, but one might be due to late program trades, and the other because 75% of the volume

    was on the ASK side where there were multiple buyers.

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    6. Watch where the blocks are trading (5000 shares or more). This will precede range

    expansion.

    7. Where is size reflected? Bid or Ask? In OTC stocks you wont see this nearly as often as on

    the NYSE.

    8. Is the Bid and Ask moving higher?

    9. Are the other stocks in the group behaving in a similar fashion? It is always better to buy

    strong stocks in a strong group.

    Five-pArt daytrading coursending stocks above the open for buys (sells reversed) either on continuation or pullback

    entry. Oftentimes, programs are very helpful on pullback buys or shorts as they give you entry at good levels, but you

    must be fast to execute. Also, youwill get some great opportunities when stocks reach certain standard deviations based

    on the implied volatility of the stock for one day. We will explain this opportunity in part 4.

    NYSE SPECIALISTS

    Specialists interact all day long with the order flow. If you are not talking directly to the floor, you have no way of

    knowing when the specialist is involved. They are very regulated in how they can interface with the order flow, unlike

    the large OTC market makers that can still sell short on minus ticks. If you are a wholesaler, you get to talk to the buyside, the sell side and you see order flow from many retail firms because they pay for it.

    The NYSE specialists are down there to make orderly markets, but you must also understand they make money

    primarily by trading. Commission billing revenue for specialists is not what it used to be, so there is a much greater

    emphasis on trading. The daytraders shot of utilizing knowledge about specialists is primarily on openings and the

    subsequent trading after the open. That is enough to give you a profitable day anytime we get those tail-wag-the-dog

    openings due to the S&P futures. Another good opportunity is happy program time when the specialists step aside and

    let the robots do their thing.

    If you asked me the one thing about specialists that you should be aware of and can capitalize on, it would be:

    Specialists will take the stock to the volume and where it wants to trade. They will get it there by buying or selling only

    the required amount of stock that complies with market-making duties.

    CONCLUDING REMARKS

    After reading this chapter, you should understand that despite not being included in that vast institutional information

    network, you can compete at a high level by recognizing the various dynamics that point to high-probability trades.

    Practice with the market table and get a good feel of how the market dynamics are constantly changing intraday. Pick

    several stocks that are close to what you think are good inflection points and watch them all day. Relate their action to

    your market table and notice how they react trading near or through these inflection points.

    Put the time in, and your efforts will take you to a different level or, at worst, get you started on the right level and in the

    right direction.

    The next part is pattern part, and there will be some highly effective intraday and daily patterns that are easy to identify.

    With your better market feel, you should be able to contribute to the profit side of the Traders Equation.

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    PART FOUR: THE BEST DAILY SETUPS TO TRADE

    This week we want to focus entirely on patterns and some of the key interpretations of bar charts. It is essential that you

    try to keep it simple, believe what you see, and act on it. Many traders spend thousands of dollars looking for

    complicated formulas because when they observe something that appears so obvious, they are not capable of believing

    it.

    Remember, as a trader you cant impose your will on the market because then you are attempting to trade what should

    be instead of what is. If you are that good or think that you have some optimal system that will work at all times, then this

    chapter isnt for you. On the other hand, if you can observe the tape action for what it actually is, ignore what you read or

    hear, and then enter a trade based on what that action is telling you, you will be on the path to being a better trader.

    PART 3 REVIEW

    During part 3, we demonstrated some of the key price, volume, range and time relationships that, if followed with only

    average ability, will place you in trades that have high predictive probability.

    Volume precedes priceis stock advancing on increased volume or declining on light volume (sells reversed).

    RangeExpansionWRBs on increasing volume with close in top or bottom of range tells us about the supply/demand

    situation of the stock. Are the buyers reaching for stock, or are the sellers having to give up price to get out?

    Price and TimeWhere is a stock closing relative to previous days? Trading above or below the previous 5 days is

    more significant than one day. Closing above or below the same 5 days is most significant.

    Range ContractionIf after a move up you see a narrowing of range and increased volume, it could mean the sellers

    have arrived and the buying/selling pressure equation has shifted. It is the reverse on the downside if you see narrowing

    range and increase in volume.

    Remember, always look to see if you are at any key inflection points which would help confirm your observation. Are

    there rising lows prior to key buy inflection points (Sells reversed)? Is stock closing above or below the midpoint of its

    daily range? More importantly, is the stock closing in the top or bottom of its range?

    SPOTTING MOMENTUM CHANGES

    When youare daytrading, youareworking primarilywith daily and intraday charts. Youare selectinguptrending stocks

    to buy and downtrending stocks for short sales. There will be times when you enter stocks just as momentum changes,

    as in the AOL example. Regardless of the time frame, you are looking for the same clues that the Generals are active,

    and which pressure is greaterthe buying or selling?

    Before we start talking through the charts, I thought it would be beneficial to review some basic bar relationships that

    you must see clearly and let frame your thought process so you free your inner self to trade what is.

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    BAR PATTERN REVIEW

    The strongest sign that a stock wants to get somewhere in a hurry is when you observe the following relationships.

    Bar Pattern (BP 1)SELLS REVERSED

    Higher high than prior day (PD) high

    Opens above PD high

    Closes up on the day, above PD high and above todays open

    Todays low higher than PD high

    This relationship is the strongest indication that the direction will continue. If you also get expanded range and

    increased volume it is even stronger.

    When you see this bar relationship, your logical progression of thought is to relate it to previous bars. Remember that it

    doesnt matter which time frame you are tracking in, the relationships have the same significance.

    How many previous closes and highs did todays close expand? Did todays bar and close take stock above a swing

    point trendline, out of a consolidation, above a significant moving average or did it attract buying/selling at a key

    geometric retracement level such as .38, .50, .618, or .786. Those are fibonacci levels and institutions are very much

    aware of them for stocks, so you should understand their usage. You look for reactions at the various retracement levels.

    You dont trade the levels blindly just because they hit a number.

    BAR PATTERNS 2,3

    BP 2 is the same as BP 1 except that todays low is the same as the prior days high. BP 3 is only different than BP 1 and

    BP 2 in that todays range is slightly within prior days range.

    All three relationships tell a strong story. Simpleyes. Importantyou bet, especially when deciding which one of

    your trade selections to choose from.

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    Bar Pattern 4

    BP 4 is your normal higher-high and higher-low continuation in direction

    If you were to see a higher high and higher low except that todays close was below the prior days close, it would be

    neutral and you would wait for the next bar to confirm direction. If todays close was below the open, even with the

    higher low, it might indicate a failure move or possible change in direction. What will the next bar say? We will discuss

    reversal bars and outside days with some of the patterns.

    Another important aspect of looking at these relationships is to compare your stocks related to stocks in the group and toany sector index that is pertinent, in addition to the S&P 500, if in fact, that is the correct bogey that your stock tracks.

    SWING POINTS

    You hear me often refer to swing points or confirmation of a swing high or low, so a quick review of swing points might

    be helpful, as they are key inflection points. Stocks dont go straight up or down. They generally make higher highs and

    lows in an uptrend (Sells reversed). The high will have a lower high on each side of it, and the low swing point will have

    a higher low on each side. If the swing point has only one on each side, it is S1, two S2 and three is S3.

    EXAMPLE

    As you can see an S3 would have more significance than S1.

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    DAY 4, 5, 6

    All gave good entry above the previous days high before Day 7, which was a reversal day. Three good daytrades.

    DAY 7

    Is a WRB down, which then consolidates to a dynamite triangle which is usually a minimum of 2 inside days as

    volatility and volume diminish. The move out of the triangle is usually a good trade, as you see on the day-12 bar which

    is a WRB to downside. It doesnt have to be a perfect shape but will have mostly lower highs and higher lows as it

    narrows.

    Day 12

    WRB is a 7-bar low and then you got two inside Days, 13 and 14, forming another dynamite triangle with an explosive

    upside breakout from 69 7/8 to 77 3/4 on Day 15 with good volume. Days 16 and 17 gave you two more great daytrades

    with multi-point moves.

    NXLK ran from a Day-1 low of 52 to a Day-6 high of 81 1/4 with only a 5-bar move. That is traders volatility. The

    Day-6 high of 81 1/4 sold down to 64 on a 7-bar move which retraced 59% of the prior swing before the dynamite

    triangle breakout took NXLK to ano